The WHO's Covid-19 envoy has praised ‘brave’ Britain for trying an experimental vaccination regimen and proving its viability. The UK should think about sharing some of its stocks with poorer nations soon, he also suggested.
The vaccines against Covid-19 are a “fantastic invention” and the world “should be accessing it in an equal way,” David Nabarro, who serves as one of the World Health Organization's six special envoys tackling the pandemic, said on Sunday in an interview with Sky News' Sophy Ridge. As a rich nation and one of the front-runners in the race to vaccinate its population, the UK is among the most promising donors for the UN's vaccine-sharing program COVAX.
“Over the next six months, I am hopeful that all world leaders will commit to a fair sharing arrangement, after we've gone through the present period of competition to get as many people vaccinated as possible,” he said.
The only way to deal with a global pandemic is to get fair shares across the world now.
The UK has 400 million doses of various vaccines ordered and has shown more expediency than many other countries in distributing the drugs and getting people immunized. Nabarro said he realizes that like politicians in other countries, the British government is under pressure to put all its citizens first and prioritize full vaccination at home over participating in the UN programme. But unless the world leaders find the will to share today, humanity will likely be more fractured in a decade or two, he warned.
"In the end, we are human."
— Sophy Ridge on Sunday (@RidgeOnSunday) February 7, 2021
WHO Special Envoy on Covid-19 @davidnabarro says the UK should give vaccines to other countries when those most at risk and the over-50s are vaccinated - "it's a question of how we want to be remembered"#Ridge pic.twitter.com/sF299PoG0p
“Do we want to be remembered as a world where those who had the cash could afford to vaccinate their whole populations and countries that didn't have the cash had to cope with a possibly quite dramatically increasing death rate among their health workers?” he asked. “I don't think that's how any individual wants to be seen when they look at themselves.”
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Nabarro also complimented the British government for taking a gamble and experimenting with a de facto single-dose regimen for two-dose vaccines, agreeing that it appears to have paid off. The UK decided to postpone second shots and instead have more people get their first injection, and the early data indicates that the protection offered even by a single dose is better than expected.
The WHO didn't recommend the approach based on what vaccine developers told them, but “with this virus we are learning all the time,” the official said. “Isn't it wonderful that as a result of UK's – bravery, frankly – that this extended interval seems to be associated with even greater protection?”
I think the UK's approach has so far been vindicated. I think this is a great lesson for the rest of the world. Thank you, British scientists!
Experts advising the WHO, including those who like him are British citizens, will study the results of the experiments and the organization may change its recommendations accordingly, Nabarro promised.
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